These movies contained moments that were way more accurate than you realised. For more awesome content, check out: whatculture.com/ Follow us on Facebook at: / whatculture Catch us on Twitter: / whatculture
I was a Navy corpsman who deployed with the Marines to Afghanistan. During field med school - where they basically teach sailors to be Marines - the instructors showed us the scene from Heat as an example of how to accurately and quickly reload while under fire
Your D&D movie thing is wrong. A round of combat, meaning every player and enemies turn takes place in six seconds, not each player's move. It is assumed that everyone is acting at the same time.
And as Magua in the Last of the Mohicans. THAT was a major role, he is the major villain. And in Deep Rising, lol, he's early roles were mostly villains.
I remember the people jumping and falling.. I was 11 in 2001.. They had moved all of us into the auditorium while waiting for our parents to pick us up.. They had put the live news coverage up on the big projector screen..a boy said "look there is trash falling from the windows!" A few seconds later, one of the girls shouted,"That's not trash! It's people!" Sure enough, as they continued to fall, and the reporters moved the cameras for a better look, you could clearly see the multiple people who had jumped. I will never forget that.. I can see that moment clearly anytime I talk about it
I did extra work on Disney's Inspector Gadget in downtown Pittsburgh PA- 1990s. I saw the set "Gadgetmobile" .... the inside, int, dash had a lot of brand names/product placement & knobs, buttons. 98% of this stuff was never seen. You see the full car a few times. The labels said M&Ma scettles, Google etc.
What "clip" was Val Kilmer's character changing? A movie clip? A hair clip? I don't remember him doing either, maybe I need to rewatch the movie, I might have missed it... 🤔🤔
Concerning The Revenant that information is pretty much universal for all wild animals. Even a chicken with her chicks will also charge if you get too close.
I was mountain biking earlier today when a deer and her two calves darted out in front of me on a fire road in a forest. They ducked back into the bush, then again on the road a couple hundred yards down. This time, however, only the mother and one calf jumped back into the bush. The other just laid on its belly on the fire road. I thought it was exhausted. I parked and walked up to it. It was barely breathing, and its eyes were open but never blinked. I was there for about five minutes, and, now thinking it was injured or dying, there was nothing I could do. I rode to the end of the loop, only a couple minutes away, and when I returned, it was gone. I think it was laying still so I wouldn't notice it. The mother was nowhere in sight during all this, and if it was bigger, had antlers, or was just about any other animal, I never would have approached the calf (and probably still shouldn't have, given there was a cougar sighting in the park five days ago).
Not a single 'thespian' bomb were dropped in this video. Either was written by someone else or Garett is finally improving his vocabulary... Either way it got my thumbs up as with better writing I managed to see it till the end. 👍🏻
I have to express my gratitude for the intros 💜 i love being able to watch the auto-play preview and KNOW there's no movies covered that i care about and can skip this one. Y'all are awesome! Love the channel
@@ronanmc2112 everything about that day was sad. I watched United 93 after World Trade Center and that movie is just as depressing. What went through those pore peoples heads
The D&D one. I understand the "6 second attack round" or whatever. I've never played D&D , but I'm familiar enough with the concept. But I truly do not get how it related to being represented in the movie here? Are we just saying there were quick, alternating attack attempts before a hero could strike again? Some of the footage here didn't really seem to show that, particularly in the 1-on-1 fights. Not sure those action scenes felt any different from other action scenes in non-D&D movies.
Number 6 makes me wonder if the fight choreographer got together with the actors around a battlemat, passed out miniatures, and played through the combat scenes as actual D&D encounters.
Not film I know but the 1980s Robin Hood series was so accurate in detail that they wouldn't even shoot trees that didn't exist in late twelfth century England.
I wish you kept wtc out of it first off NO it was entirely INaccurate for instance the very moment they went in the walls were spotless in reality the marble was ripped off as if a bomb had already dropped in the building hence fire fighters saying that. Secondary explosions hidden the explosion before the building was hit killed dozens instantly and the B2 levels and below etc
There's plenty of documentary and news footage confirming that. From some hitting the ground or landing on cars, to those who can be seen on camera being mistaken for debris.
"World Trade Center" is an awful movie except for about the first 20-30 minutes in which its ability to convey the horror of the WTC site under attack is literally breathtaking. True respect to the experience of those people, that day.
If the D&D movie merits mention, please disclaim it, at least. If you didn't notice that it insulted 100% of audience members, you weren't applying as much logic as you were capable. Screenwriter misandry is pseudo-feminism.
Pronoun overwatch at 8:15. Please say "they" if someone is known to prefer that pronoun. In this instance, all indications are that Warchief Yellowhawk would prefer you to say "his Montana home," except in that he might well resent the English language.